Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons: Notice of 2023 Allowance Allocations for Production and Consumption of Regulated Substances Under the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act of 2020, 61314-61318 [2022-22059]
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61314
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2022 / Notices
will not be included in the public
docket and should not be submitted
through www.regulations.gov or email.
For additional information about the
EPA’s public docket visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/.
Public Docket: Publicly available
docket materials may be accessed
Online at www.regulations.gov.
The
Designated Federal Officer (DFO), Tom
Tracy, via phone/voicemail at: 919–
541–4334; or via email at: tracy.tom@
epa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Any member of the public interested
in receiving a draft agenda, attending
the meeting, or making a presentation at
the meeting should contact Tom Tracy
no later than October 23, 2022.
The Board
of Scientific Counselors (BOSC) is a
federal advisory committee that
provides advice and recommendations
to EPA’s Office of Research and
Development on technical and
management issues of its research
programs. The meeting agenda and
materials will be posted to https://
www.epa.gov/bosc.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Proposed agenda items for the
meeting include, but are not limited to,
the following: review of the New
Chemicals Collaborative Research
Program.
Information on Services Available:
For information on translation services,
access, or services for individuals with
disabilities, please contact Tom Tracy at
919–541–4334 or tracy.tom@epa.gov. To
request accommodation of a disability,
please contact Tom Tracy at least ten
days prior to the meeting to give the
EPA adequate time to process your
request.
Authority: Pub. L. 92–463, 1, Oct. 6,
1972, 86 Stat. 770.
Mary Ross,
Director, Office of Science Advisor, Policy
and Engagement.
[FR Doc. 2022–22046 Filed 10–7–22; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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phasedown schedule, for 2023, total
production allowances may not exceed
344,299,157 metric tons of exchange
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0669; FRL–9116–03–
value equivalent (MTEVe) and total
OAR]
consumption allowances may not
exceed 273,498,315 MTEVe.
Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons:
EPA regulations at 40 CFR part 84,
Notice of 2023 Allowance Allocations
subpart A, outline the process by which
for Production and Consumption of
the Agency determines the number of
Regulated Substances Under the
allowances each entity is allocated. EPA
American Innovation and
allocated allowances consistent with
Manufacturing Act of 2020
this process for calendar year 2023, and
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
has posted entity-specific allowance
Agency (EPA).
allocations on its website at https://
www.epa.gov/climate-hfcs-reduction.
ACTION: Notice.
An allowance allocated under the AIM
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Act does not constitute a property right
Agency (EPA) has issued calendar year
and is a limited authorization for the
2023 allowances for the production and production or consumption of a
consumption of hydrofluorocarbons in
regulated substance.
accordance with the Agency’s
EPA has codified the procedure for
regulations as established in the 2021
calculating application-specific
final rule titled Phasedown of
allowance allocations in 40 CFR 84.13.
Hydrofluorocarbons: Establishing the
These allowances are drawn from both
Allowance Allocation and Trading
the production and consumption
Program under the American Innovation allowance pools. EPA is issuing
and Manufacturing Act. The American
‘‘application-specific allowances’’ to
Innovation and Manufacturing Act
end users in five applications
directs the Environmental Protection
established by the AIM Act: propellants
Agency by October 1 of each calendar
in metered dose inhalers, defense
year to determine the quantity of
sprays, structural composite preformed
production and consumption
polyurethane foam for marine use and
allowances for the following calendar
trailer use, etching of semiconductor
year. The Agency also provided notice
material or wafers and the cleaning of
to certain companies on September 30,
chemical vapor deposition chambers
2022, that the Agency intends to retire
within the semiconductor
an identified set of those companies’
manufacturing sector, and onboard
allowances in accordance with the
aerospace fire suppression.
administrative consequences provisions Additionally, EPA is issuing
established in the final rule.
‘‘application-specific allowances’’ to the
U.S. Department of Defense for missionFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
critical military end uses.
Andy Chang, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Stratospheric
EPA has denied requests for
Protection Division, telephone number:
application-specific allowances from
202–564–6658; email address:
Applied Materials, Inc; Benuvia
chang.andy@epa.gov. You may also visit Manufacturing; General Electric Global
EPA’s website at https://www.epa.gov/
Research Center; Gilero LLC; Guardian
climate-hfcs-reduction for further
Protective Devices, Inc.; nHalience LLC;
information.
and Shamrock Filling LLC because they
are ineligible under 40 CFR 84.13. The
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
requests were ineligible for at least one
Subsection (e)(2)(D)(i) of the American
of the following reasons:
Innovation and Manufacturing Act of
(1) Did not meet the criteria for HFC
2020 (AIM Act) directs the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) use in a covered application;
(2) Did not submit by the deadline;
to determine, by October 1 of each
(3) Did not provide proper supporting
calendar year, the quantity of
documentation or justification for their
allowances for the production and
requests; or
consumption of regulated substances
(4) Did not report purchases of
that may be used for the following
regulated substances in the past three
calendar year. EPA has codified the
years.
production and consumption baselines
EPA has allocated 2023 applicationand phasedown schedules for regulated
specific allowances as shown in Table 1.
substances in 40 CFR 84.7. Under the
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2022 / Notices
61315
TABLE 1—APPLICATION-SPECIFIC ALLOWANCES FOR CALENDAR YEAR 2023
Entity
Application
Analog Devices ........................................................................
Apple ........................................................................................
Armstrong Pharmaceuticals .....................................................
ASML US .................................................................................
AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals .................................................
Aurobindo Pharma USA ..........................................................
Broadcom .................................................................................
Compsys ..................................................................................
Defense Technology ................................................................
Diodes Incorporated .................................................................
GlobalFoundries .......................................................................
Hitachi High-Tech America ......................................................
IBM Corporation .......................................................................
Intel Corporation ......................................................................
InvaGen Pharmaceuticals ........................................................
Jireh Semiconductor ................................................................
Keysight Technologies .............................................................
Kindeva Drug Delivery .............................................................
Lupin ........................................................................................
Medtronic .................................................................................
Microchip Technology ..............................................................
Micron Technology ...................................................................
Newport Fab DBA TowerJazz .................................................
NXP Semiconductors ...............................................................
Odin Pharmaceuticals ..............................................................
Polar Semiconductor ................................................................
Proteng Distribution .................................................................
Qorvo Texas ............................................................................
Raytheon Technologies ...........................................................
Renesas Electronics America ..................................................
Samsung Austin Semiconductor ..............................................
Security Equipment Corporation ..............................................
Semiconductor Components Industries DBA ON Semiconductor.
SkyWater Technology ..............................................................
Skyworks Solutions ..................................................................
Texas Instruments ...................................................................
The Research Foundation for The State University of New
York.
Tokyo Electron America ...........................................................
Tower Semiconductor San Antonio .........................................
TSMC Arizona Corporation ......................................................
UDAP Industries ......................................................................
Wabash National Corporation ..................................................
WaferTech ................................................................................
Wolfspeed ................................................................................
X–FAB Texas ...........................................................................
Zarc International .....................................................................
Department of Defense ............................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Structural Composite Foam ....................................................
Defense Sprays .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Metered Dose Inhalers ............................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Onboard Aerospace Fire Suppression ...................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Onboard Aerospace Fire Suppression ...................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Defense Sprays .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
28,852.2
1,033.8
157,231.4
1,237.2
4,652.7
65,427.9
834.7
14,152.8
9,366.7
3,667.1
177,721.8
1,064.4
533.5
746,212.5
74,380.1
5,787.8
538.8
408,952.0
24,098.0
637.6
31,266.7
42,600.7
8,042.3
86,878.8
1,708.5
13,446.4
4,060.4
1,237.2
952.6
4,445.5
384,969.7
63,889.9
38,821.5
Semiconductors
Semiconductors
Semiconductors
Semiconductors
.......................................................................
.......................................................................
.......................................................................
.......................................................................
17,549.8
4,652.3
194,744.9
159.9
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Defense Sprays .......................................................................
Structural Composite Foam ....................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Semiconductors .......................................................................
Defense Sprays .......................................................................
Mission-critical Military End Uses ...........................................
558.8
4,948.7
32,632.0
110,727.8
73,543.0
22,355.4
36,114.7
5,076.0
1,384.1
2,513,169.3
Total ..................................................................................
All ............................................................................................
5,426,319.9
1 Numbers
may not sum due to rounding.
EPA has codified the procedure for
calculating the production allowance
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Number of
applicationspecific
allowances issued
(MTEVe) 1
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allocation in 40 CFR 84.9. EPA has
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allocated calendar year 2023 production
allowances as shown in Table 2.
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2022 / Notices
TABLE 2—PRODUCTION ALLOWANCES FOR CALENDAR YEAR 2023
Entity
Number of
production
allowances
issued
(MTEVe) 1
Application-specific allowances 2 ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
Arkema ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Chemour ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Honeywell International .........................................................................................................................................................................................................
Iofina Chemical .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Mexichem Fluor DBA Koura .................................................................................................................................................................................................
5,426,319.9
40,873,469.3
75,703,417.3
171,747,616.1
1,758.6
50,546,575.8
Total ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
344,299,157.0
1 Numbers
2 See
may not sum due to rounding.
Table 1.
EPA has codified the procedure for
calculating the consumption allowance
allocation in 40 CFR 84.11. Calendar
year 2023 consumption allowances have
also been allocated to new market
entrants consistent with 40 CFR 84.15.1
EPA has allocated calendar year 2023
consumption allowances as shown in
Table 3.
TABLE 3—CONSUMPTION ALLOWANCES FOR CALENDAR YEAR 2023
Number of
consumption
allowances
issued
(MTEVe) 1
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Entity
Application-specific allowances 2 ....................................................................................................................................................................................
A.C.S. Reclamation & Recovery (Absolute Chiller Services) * .......................................................................................................................................
Ability Refrigerants * ........................................................................................................................................................................................................
ACT Commodities * .........................................................................................................................................................................................................
Advance Auto Parts * ......................................................................................................................................................................................................
Advanced Specialty Gases .............................................................................................................................................................................................
AFK & Co. * .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
AFS Cooling * ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................
A-Gas ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Air Liquide USA ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
AllCool Refrigerant Reclaim * ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
Altair Partners .................................................................................................................................................................................................................
American Air Components * ............................................................................................................................................................................................
Arkema ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Artsen ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Automart Distributors DBA Refrigerant Plus * .................................................................................................................................................................
AutoZone Parts ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
AW Product Sales & Marketing ......................................................................................................................................................................................
Bluon ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
CC Packaging * ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Certified Refrigerant Services * .......................................................................................................................................................................................
Chemours ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Chemp Technology * .......................................................................................................................................................................................................
Combs Gas .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
ComStar International .....................................................................................................................................................................................................
Creative Solution * ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................
Cross World Group * .......................................................................................................................................................................................................
Daikin America ................................................................................................................................................................................................................
EDX Industry * .................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Electronic Fluorocarbons ................................................................................................................................................................................................
Fireside Holdings DBA American Refrigerants * .............................................................................................................................................................
First Continental International .........................................................................................................................................................................................
FluoroFusion Specialty Chemicals ..................................................................................................................................................................................
Freskoa USA * .................................................................................................................................................................................................................
GlaxoSmithKline ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Golden Refrigerant * ........................................................................................................................................................................................................
Harp USA ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Honeywell International ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Hudson Technologies .....................................................................................................................................................................................................
Hungry Bear * ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................
ICool USA .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................
IGas Holdings ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Iofina Chemical ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Kidde-Fenwal * ................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Lenz Sales & Distribution ................................................................................................................................................................................................
Lina Trade * .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Linde ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Meraki Group * ................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Metalcraft * .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Mexichem Fluor DBA Koura ...........................................................................................................................................................................................
1 A comprehensive overview and discussion of
allocation decisions to new market entrants can be
found in the Agency’s April 5, 2022, notice
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Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons: Notice of 2022
Set-Aside Pool Allowance Allocations for
Production and Consumption of Regulated
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
5,426,319.9
200,000.0
200,000.0
77.8
190,699.1
285,314.5
193,335.9
200,000.0
3,209,232.5
498,530.3
200,000.0
2,918,730.4
200,000.0
31,075,488.7
1,027,571.2
200,000.0
2,486,664.3
194,505.7
33,459.8
194,000.0
200,000.0
33,382,686.1
200,000.0
1,287,918.3
374,063.9
200,000.0
200,000.0
3,120,932.2
200,000.0
104,289.0
199,978.5
769,838.0
2,552,532.6
200,000.0
536,367.9
200,000.0
765,574.0
82,497,424.7
2,988,057.5
200,000.0
3,406,995.9
25,944,614.3
1,264.9
200,000.0
1,110,319.3
200,000.0
532,503.3
200,000.0
161,000.0
25,479,884.3
Substances Under the American Innovation and
Manufacturing Act of 2020 [87 FR 19683].
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2022 / Notices
61317
TABLE 3—CONSUMPTION ALLOWANCES FOR CALENDAR YEAR 2023—Continued
Number of
consumption
allowances
issued
(MTEVe) 1
Entity
Mondy Global ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................
National Refrigerants ......................................................................................................................................................................................................
Nature Gas Import and Export ........................................................................................................................................................................................
North American Refrigerants * ........................................................................................................................................................................................
O23 Energy Plus * ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................
Perfect Score Too DBA Perfect Cycle* ..........................................................................................................................................................................
Reclamation Technologies * ............................................................................................................................................................................................
Refrigerants, Inc. .............................................................................................................................................................................................................
RMS of Georgia ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................
RTR Suppliers * ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Saalok * ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Sciarra Laboratories * ......................................................................................................................................................................................................
SDS Refrigerant Services * .............................................................................................................................................................................................
Showa Chemicals of America .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Solvay Fluorides ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Summit Refrigerants * .....................................................................................................................................................................................................
SynAgile Corporation * ....................................................................................................................................................................................................
Technical Chemical .........................................................................................................................................................................................................
TradeQuim * ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Transocean Offshore Deepwater Drilling ........................................................................................................................................................................
Tulstar Products ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Tyco Fire Products * ........................................................................................................................................................................................................
USA United Suppliers of America DBA USA Refrigerants * ...........................................................................................................................................
USSC Acquisition Corp * .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Walmart ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Waysmos USA ................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Weitron ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Wesco HMB * ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Wilhelmsen Ships Service ..............................................................................................................................................................................................
318,706.9
19,806,810.9
819,624.4
200,000.0
200,000.0
37,876.0
200,000.0
26,550.9
1,621,276.8
198,000.0
200,000.0
8,700.0
200,000.0
73,466.6
1,102,459.2
200,000.0
1,125.1
974,140.0
200,000.0
16.8
734,110.9
200,000.0
200,000.0
131,451.0
2,280,583.0
634,504.6
6,338,344.6
200,000.0
40,392.5
Total .........................................................................................................................................................................................................................
273,498,315.0
1 Numbers
may not sum due to rounding.
2 See Table 1.
* These entities were issued consumption allowances consistent with the provisions in 40 CFR 84.15(e)(3). Consistent with 40 CFR 84.15(e)(3) and as clarified in
the Agency’s 2021 final rule, these entities were issued the same number of allowances for 2023 as they were in 2022. In accordance with 40 CFR 84.15(f)(1), allowances allocated to these entities may not be transferred.
On September 30, 2022, EPA also
provided notice to four entities of the
Agency’s intent to take administrative
consequences in accordance with 40
CFR 84.35. Using this authority, EPA
can retire, revoke, or withhold the
allocation of allowances, or ban a
company from receiving, transferring, or
conferring allowances.2 EPA provided
notice of its intent to retire an identified
set of each of the four companies’
allowances, affecting both calendar year
2022 and calendar year 2023
allowances.
Judicial Review
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The AIM Act provides that certain
sections of the Clean Air Act (CAA)
‘‘shall apply to’’ the AIM Act and
actions ‘‘promulgated by the
Administrator of [EPA] pursuant to [the
AIM Act] as though [the AIM Act] were
2 Administrative consequences that the Agency
has finalized can be found here: https://
www.epa.gov/climate-hfcs-reduction/
administrative-consequences-under-hfc-allocationrule.
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18:28 Oct 07, 2022
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expressly included in title VI of [the
CAA].’’ 42 U.S.C. 7675(k)(1)(C). Among
the applicable sections of the CAA is
section 307, which includes provisions
on judicial review. Section 307(b)(1)
provides, in part, that petitions for
review must only be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit: (i) when the agency
action consists of ‘‘nationally applicable
regulations promulgated, or final actions
taken, by the Administrator,’’ or (ii)
when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, but ‘‘such action is based on
a determination of nationwide scope or
effect and if in taking such action the
Administrator finds and publishes that
such action is based on such a
determination.’’ For locally or regionally
applicable final actions, the CAA
reserves to the EPA complete discretion
whether to invoke the exception in (ii).
The final action herein noticed is
‘‘nationally applicable’’ within the
meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1). The
AIM Act imposes a national cap on the
total number of allowances available for
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Sfmt 4703
each year for all entities nationwide. 42
U.S.C. 7675(e)(2)(B)–(D). For 2023, there
was a national pool of 344,299,157
production allowances and 273,498,315
consumption allowances available to
distribute. The action noticed herein
distributed that finite set of allowances
consistent with the methodology EPA
established in the nationally applicable
framework rule. As such, the allowance
allocation is the division and
assignment of a single, nationwide pool
of HFC allowances to entities across the
country according to the uniform,
national methodology established in
EPA’s regulations. Each entity’s
allowance allocation is a relative share
of that pool; thus, any additional
allowances awarded to one entity
directly affects the allocations to others.
In the alternative, to the extent a court
finds the final action to be locally or
regionally applicable, the Administrator
is exercising the complete discretion
afforded to him under the CAA to make
and publish a finding that the action is
based on a determination of
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2022 / Notices
‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ within the
meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1).3 In
deciding to invoke this exception, the
Administrator has taken into account a
number of policy considerations,
including his judgment regarding the
benefit of obtaining the D.C. Circuit’s
authoritative centralized review, rather
than allowing development of the issue
in other contexts, in order to ensure
consistency in the Agency’s approach to
allocation of allowances in accordance
with EPA’s national regulations in 40
CFR part 84. The final action treats all
affected entities consistently in how the
Part 84 regulations are applied. The
allowance allocation is the division and
assignment of a single, nationwide pool
of HFC allowances to entities across the
country according to the uniform,
national methodology established in
EPA’s regulations, and each entity’s
allowance allocation is a relative share
of that pool; thus, any additional
allowances awarded to one entity
directly affect the allocations to others.
The Administrator finds that this is a
matter on which national uniformity is
desirable to take advantage of the D.C.
Circuit’s administrative law expertise
and facilitate the orderly development
of the basic law under the AIM Act and
EPA’s implementing regulations. The
Administrator also finds that
consolidated review of the action in the
D.C. Circuit will avoid piecemeal
litigation in the regional circuits, further
judicial economy, and eliminate the risk
of inconsistent results for different
regulated entities. The Administrator
also finds that a nationally consistent
approach to the allocation of allowances
constitutes the best use of agency
resources. The Administrator is
publishing his finding that the action is
based on a determination of nationwide
scope or effect in the Federal Register
as part of this notice in addition to
inclusion on the website announcing
allocations.
For these reasons, the final action of
the Agency allocating
hydrofluorocarbon allowances to
entities located throughout the country
is nationally applicable or, alternatively,
the Administrator is exercising the
complete discretion afforded to him by
the CAA and finds that the final action
is based on a determination of
nationwide scope or effect for purposes
of CAA section 307(b)(1) and is hereby
3 In the report on the 1977 Amendments that
revised section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, Congress
noted that the Administrator’s determination that
the ‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ exception applies
would be appropriate for any action that has a
scope or effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See
H.R. Rep. No. 95–294 at 323, 324, reprinted in 1977
U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402–03.
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18:28 Oct 07, 2022
Jkt 259001
publishing that finding in the Federal
Register.
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit by December 12, 2022.
Hans Christopher Grundler,
Director, Office of Atmospheric Programs.
[FR Doc. 2022–22059 Filed 10–7–22; 8:45 am]
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ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
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including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and ways to
further reduce the information
collection burden on small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
The FCC may not conduct or sponsor a
collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. No person shall be subject to
any penalty for failing to comply with
a collection of information subject to the
PRA that does not display a valid OMB
control number.
DATES: Written PRA comments should
be submitted on or before December 12,
2022. If you anticipate that you will be
submitting comments but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, you should
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
advise the contact listed below as soon
as possible.
ADDRESSES: Direct all PRA comments to
Cathy Williams, FCC, via email to PRA@
fcc.gov and to Cathy.Williams@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information about the
information collection, contact Cathy
Williams at (202) 418–2918.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Control Number: 3060–0863.
Title: Satellite Delivery of Network
Signals to Unserved Households for
Purposes of the Satellite Home Viewer
Act.
Form Number: Not applicable.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Business or other forprofit entities.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 848 respondents; 250,000
responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 0.50
hours.
Frequency of Response:
Recordkeeping requirement, On
occasion reporting requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Required to
obtain or retain benefits. Statutory
authority for this information collection
action is contained in 47 U.S.C. 339.
Total Annual Burden to Respondents:
125,000 hours.
Total Annual Cost: No cost.
Needs and Uses: The information
collection requirements contained in 47
CFR 73.686 describes a method for
measuring signal strength at a
household so that the satellite and
broadcast industries would have a
uniform method for making an actual
determination of the signal strength that
a household received. The information
gathered as part of the noise-limited
service contour signal strength tests will
be used to indicate whether a household
is ‘‘unserved’’ by over-the-air network
signals.
Satellite and broadcast industries
making field strength measurements for
formal submission to the Commission in
rulemaking proceedings, or making such
measurements upon the request of the
Commission, shall follow the procedure
for making and reporting such
measurements which shall be included
in a report to the Commission and
submitted in affidavit form, in triplicate.
The report shall contain the following
information:
(a) Tables of field strength
measurements, which for each
measuring location; (b) U.S. Geological
Survey topographic maps; (c) All
information necessary to determine the
pertinent characteristics of the
transmitting installation; (d) A list of
E:\FR\FM\11OCN1.SGM
11OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 195 (Tuesday, October 11, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 61314-61318]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-22059]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0669; FRL-9116-03-OAR]
Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons: Notice of 2023 Allowance
Allocations for Production and Consumption of Regulated Substances
Under the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act of 2020
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued calendar
year 2023 allowances for the production and consumption of
hydrofluorocarbons in accordance with the Agency's regulations as
established in the 2021 final rule titled Phasedown of
Hydrofluorocarbons: Establishing the Allowance Allocation and Trading
Program under the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act. The
American Innovation and Manufacturing Act directs the Environmental
Protection Agency by October 1 of each calendar year to determine the
quantity of production and consumption allowances for the following
calendar year. The Agency also provided notice to certain companies on
September 30, 2022, that the Agency intends to retire an identified set
of those companies' allowances in accordance with the administrative
consequences provisions established in the final rule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andy Chang, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Stratospheric Protection Division, telephone number:
202-564-6658; email address: [email protected]. You may also visit
EPA's website at https://www.epa.gov/climate-hfcs-reduction for further
information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Subsection (e)(2)(D)(i) of the American
Innovation and Manufacturing Act of 2020 (AIM Act) directs the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to determine, by October 1 of
each calendar year, the quantity of allowances for the production and
consumption of regulated substances that may be used for the following
calendar year. EPA has codified the production and consumption
baselines and phasedown schedules for regulated substances in 40 CFR
84.7. Under the phasedown schedule, for 2023, total production
allowances may not exceed 344,299,157 metric tons of exchange value
equivalent (MTEVe) and total consumption allowances may not exceed
273,498,315 MTEVe.
EPA regulations at 40 CFR part 84, subpart A, outline the process
by which the Agency determines the number of allowances each entity is
allocated. EPA allocated allowances consistent with this process for
calendar year 2023, and has posted entity-specific allowance
allocations on its website at https://www.epa.gov/climate-hfcs-reduction. An allowance allocated under the AIM Act does not constitute
a property right and is a limited authorization for the production or
consumption of a regulated substance.
EPA has codified the procedure for calculating application-specific
allowance allocations in 40 CFR 84.13. These allowances are drawn from
both the production and consumption allowance pools. EPA is issuing
``application-specific allowances'' to end users in five applications
established by the AIM Act: propellants in metered dose inhalers,
defense sprays, structural composite preformed polyurethane foam for
marine use and trailer use, etching of semiconductor material or wafers
and the cleaning of chemical vapor deposition chambers within the
semiconductor manufacturing sector, and onboard aerospace fire
suppression. Additionally, EPA is issuing ``application-specific
allowances'' to the U.S. Department of Defense for mission-critical
military end uses.
EPA has denied requests for application-specific allowances from
Applied Materials, Inc; Benuvia Manufacturing; General Electric Global
Research Center; Gilero LLC; Guardian Protective Devices, Inc.;
nHalience LLC; and Shamrock Filling LLC because they are ineligible
under 40 CFR 84.13. The requests were ineligible for at least one of
the following reasons:
(1) Did not meet the criteria for HFC use in a covered application;
(2) Did not submit by the deadline;
(3) Did not provide proper supporting documentation or
justification for their requests; or
(4) Did not report purchases of regulated substances in the past
three years.
EPA has allocated 2023 application-specific allowances as shown in
Table 1.
[[Page 61315]]
Table 1--Application-Specific Allowances for Calendar Year 2023
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
application-
Entity Application specific
allowances issued
(MTEVe) \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analog Devices.................. Semiconductors..... 28,852.2
Apple........................... Semiconductors..... 1,033.8
Armstrong Pharmaceuticals....... Metered Dose 157,231.4
Inhalers.
ASML US......................... Semiconductors..... 1,237.2
AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals..... Metered Dose 4,652.7
Inhalers.
Aurobindo Pharma USA............ Metered Dose 65,427.9
Inhalers.
Broadcom........................ Semiconductors..... 834.7
Compsys......................... Structural 14,152.8
Composite Foam.
Defense Technology.............. Defense Sprays..... 9,366.7
Diodes Incorporated............. Semiconductors..... 3,667.1
GlobalFoundries................. Semiconductors..... 177,721.8
Hitachi High-Tech America....... Semiconductors..... 1,064.4
IBM Corporation................. Semiconductors..... 533.5
Intel Corporation............... Semiconductors..... 746,212.5
InvaGen Pharmaceuticals......... Metered Dose 74,380.1
Inhalers.
Jireh Semiconductor............. Semiconductors..... 5,787.8
Keysight Technologies........... Semiconductors..... 538.8
Kindeva Drug Delivery........... Metered Dose 408,952.0
Inhalers.
Lupin........................... Metered Dose 24,098.0
Inhalers.
Medtronic....................... Semiconductors..... 637.6
Microchip Technology............ Semiconductors..... 31,266.7
Micron Technology............... Semiconductors..... 42,600.7
Newport Fab DBA TowerJazz....... Semiconductors..... 8,042.3
NXP Semiconductors.............. Semiconductors..... 86,878.8
Odin Pharmaceuticals............ Metered Dose 1,708.5
Inhalers.
Polar Semiconductor............. Semiconductors..... 13,446.4
Proteng Distribution............ Onboard Aerospace 4,060.4
Fire Suppression.
Qorvo Texas..................... Semiconductors..... 1,237.2
Raytheon Technologies........... Onboard Aerospace 952.6
Fire Suppression.
Renesas Electronics America..... Semiconductors..... 4,445.5
Samsung Austin Semiconductor.... Semiconductors..... 384,969.7
Security Equipment Corporation.. Defense Sprays..... 63,889.9
Semiconductor Components Semiconductors..... 38,821.5
Industries DBA ON Semiconductor.
SkyWater Technology............. Semiconductors..... 17,549.8
Skyworks Solutions.............. Semiconductors..... 4,652.3
Texas Instruments............... Semiconductors..... 194,744.9
The Research Foundation for The Semiconductors..... 159.9
State University of New York.
Tokyo Electron America.......... Semiconductors..... 558.8
Tower Semiconductor San Antonio. Semiconductors..... 4,948.7
TSMC Arizona Corporation........ Semiconductors..... 32,632.0
UDAP Industries................. Defense Sprays..... 110,727.8
Wabash National Corporation..... Structural 73,543.0
Composite Foam.
WaferTech....................... Semiconductors..... 22,355.4
Wolfspeed....................... Semiconductors..... 36,114.7
X-FAB Texas..................... Semiconductors..... 5,076.0
Zarc International.............. Defense Sprays..... 1,384.1
Department of Defense........... Mission-critical 2,513,169.3
Military End Uses.
------------------
Total....................... All................ 5,426,319.9
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Numbers may not sum due to rounding.
EPA has codified the procedure for calculating the production
allowance allocation in 40 CFR 84.9. EPA has allocated calendar year
2023 production allowances as shown in Table 2.
[[Page 61316]]
Table 2--Production Allowances for Calendar Year 2023
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
production
Entity allowances
issued (MTEVe)
\1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application-specific allowances \2\..................... 5,426,319.9
Arkema.................................................. 40,873,469.3
Chemour................................................. 75,703,417.3
Honeywell International................................. 171,747,616.1
Iofina Chemical......................................... 1,758.6
Mexichem Fluor DBA Koura................................ 50,546,575.8
---------------
Total............................................... 344,299,157.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Numbers may not sum due to rounding.
\2\ See Table 1.
EPA has codified the procedure for calculating the consumption
allowance allocation in 40 CFR 84.11. Calendar year 2023 consumption
allowances have also been allocated to new market entrants consistent
with 40 CFR 84.15.\1\ EPA has allocated calendar year 2023 consumption
allowances as shown in Table 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A comprehensive overview and discussion of allocation
decisions to new market entrants can be found in the Agency's April
5, 2022, notice Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons: Notice of 2022 Set-
Aside Pool Allowance Allocations for Production and Consumption of
Regulated Substances Under the American Innovation and Manufacturing
Act of 2020 [87 FR 19683].
Table 3--Consumption Allowances for Calendar Year 2023
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
consumption
Entity allowances issued
(MTEVe) \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application-specific allowances \2\.................. 5,426,319.9
A.C.S. Reclamation & Recovery (Absolute Chiller 200,000.0
Services) *.........................................
Ability Refrigerants *............................... 200,000.0
ACT Commodities *.................................... 77.8
Advance Auto Parts *................................. 190,699.1
Advanced Specialty Gases............................. 285,314.5
AFK & Co. *.......................................... 193,335.9
AFS Cooling *........................................ 200,000.0
A-Gas................................................ 3,209,232.5
Air Liquide USA...................................... 498,530.3
AllCool Refrigerant Reclaim *........................ 200,000.0
Altair Partners...................................... 2,918,730.4
American Air Components *............................ 200,000.0
Arkema............................................... 31,075,488.7
Artsen............................................... 1,027,571.2
Automart Distributors DBA Refrigerant Plus *......... 200,000.0
AutoZone Parts....................................... 2,486,664.3
AW Product Sales & Marketing......................... 194,505.7
Bluon................................................ 33,459.8
CC Packaging *....................................... 194,000.0
Certified Refrigerant Services *..................... 200,000.0
Chemours............................................. 33,382,686.1
Chemp Technology *................................... 200,000.0
Combs Gas............................................ 1,287,918.3
ComStar International................................ 374,063.9
Creative Solution *.................................. 200,000.0
Cross World Group *.................................. 200,000.0
Daikin America....................................... 3,120,932.2
EDX Industry *....................................... 200,000.0
Electronic Fluorocarbons............................. 104,289.0
Fireside Holdings DBA American Refrigerants *........ 199,978.5
First Continental International...................... 769,838.0
FluoroFusion Specialty Chemicals..................... 2,552,532.6
Freskoa USA *........................................ 200,000.0
GlaxoSmithKline...................................... 536,367.9
Golden Refrigerant *................................. 200,000.0
Harp USA............................................. 765,574.0
Honeywell International.............................. 82,497,424.7
Hudson Technologies.................................. 2,988,057.5
Hungry Bear *........................................ 200,000.0
ICool USA............................................ 3,406,995.9
IGas Holdings........................................ 25,944,614.3
Iofina Chemical...................................... 1,264.9
Kidde-Fenwal *....................................... 200,000.0
Lenz Sales & Distribution............................ 1,110,319.3
Lina Trade *......................................... 200,000.0
Linde................................................ 532,503.3
Meraki Group *....................................... 200,000.0
Metalcraft *......................................... 161,000.0
Mexichem Fluor DBA Koura............................. 25,479,884.3
[[Page 61317]]
Mondy Global......................................... 318,706.9
National Refrigerants................................ 19,806,810.9
Nature Gas Import and Export......................... 819,624.4
North American Refrigerants *........................ 200,000.0
O23 Energy Plus *.................................... 200,000.0
Perfect Score Too DBA Perfect Cycle*................. 37,876.0
Reclamation Technologies *........................... 200,000.0
Refrigerants, Inc.................................... 26,550.9
RMS of Georgia....................................... 1,621,276.8
RTR Suppliers *...................................... 198,000.0
Saalok *............................................. 200,000.0
Sciarra Laboratories *............................... 8,700.0
SDS Refrigerant Services *........................... 200,000.0
Showa Chemicals of America........................... 73,466.6
Solvay Fluorides..................................... 1,102,459.2
Summit Refrigerants *................................ 200,000.0
SynAgile Corporation *............................... 1,125.1
Technical Chemical................................... 974,140.0
TradeQuim *.......................................... 200,000.0
Transocean Offshore Deepwater Drilling............... 16.8
Tulstar Products..................................... 734,110.9
Tyco Fire Products *................................. 200,000.0
USA United Suppliers of America DBA USA Refrigerants 200,000.0
*...................................................
USSC Acquisition Corp *.............................. 131,451.0
Walmart.............................................. 2,280,583.0
Waysmos USA.......................................... 634,504.6
Weitron.............................................. 6,338,344.6
Wesco HMB *.......................................... 200,000.0
Wilhelmsen Ships Service............................. 40,392.5
------------------
Total............................................ 273,498,315.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Numbers may not sum due to rounding.
\2\ See Table 1.
* These entities were issued consumption allowances consistent with the
provisions in 40 CFR 84.15(e)(3). Consistent with 40 CFR 84.15(e)(3)
and as clarified in the Agency's 2021 final rule, these entities were
issued the same number of allowances for 2023 as they were in 2022. In
accordance with 40 CFR 84.15(f)(1), allowances allocated to these
entities may not be transferred.
On September 30, 2022, EPA also provided notice to four entities of
the Agency's intent to take administrative consequences in accordance
with 40 CFR 84.35. Using this authority, EPA can retire, revoke, or
withhold the allocation of allowances, or ban a company from receiving,
transferring, or conferring allowances.\2\ EPA provided notice of its
intent to retire an identified set of each of the four companies'
allowances, affecting both calendar year 2022 and calendar year 2023
allowances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Administrative consequences that the Agency has finalized
can be found here: https://www.epa.gov/climate-hfcs-reduction/administrative-consequences-under-hfc-allocation-rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Judicial Review
The AIM Act provides that certain sections of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) ``shall apply to'' the AIM Act and actions ``promulgated by the
Administrator of [EPA] pursuant to [the AIM Act] as though [the AIM
Act] were expressly included in title VI of [the CAA].'' 42 U.S.C.
7675(k)(1)(C). Among the applicable sections of the CAA is section 307,
which includes provisions on judicial review. Section 307(b)(1)
provides, in part, that petitions for review must only be filed in the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit:
(i) when the agency action consists of ``nationally applicable
regulations promulgated, or final actions taken, by the
Administrator,'' or (ii) when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, but ``such action is based on a determination of nationwide
scope or effect and if in taking such action the Administrator finds
and publishes that such action is based on such a determination.'' For
locally or regionally applicable final actions, the CAA reserves to the
EPA complete discretion whether to invoke the exception in (ii).
The final action herein noticed is ``nationally applicable'' within
the meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1). The AIM Act imposes a national
cap on the total number of allowances available for each year for all
entities nationwide. 42 U.S.C. 7675(e)(2)(B)-(D). For 2023, there was a
national pool of 344,299,157 production allowances and 273,498,315
consumption allowances available to distribute. The action noticed
herein distributed that finite set of allowances consistent with the
methodology EPA established in the nationally applicable framework
rule. As such, the allowance allocation is the division and assignment
of a single, nationwide pool of HFC allowances to entities across the
country according to the uniform, national methodology established in
EPA's regulations. Each entity's allowance allocation is a relative
share of that pool; thus, any additional allowances awarded to one
entity directly affects the allocations to others.
In the alternative, to the extent a court finds the final action to
be locally or regionally applicable, the Administrator is exercising
the complete discretion afforded to him under the CAA to make and
publish a finding that the action is based on a determination of
[[Page 61318]]
``nationwide scope or effect'' within the meaning of CAA section
307(b)(1).\3\ In deciding to invoke this exception, the Administrator
has taken into account a number of policy considerations, including his
judgment regarding the benefit of obtaining the D.C. Circuit's
authoritative centralized review, rather than allowing development of
the issue in other contexts, in order to ensure consistency in the
Agency's approach to allocation of allowances in accordance with EPA's
national regulations in 40 CFR part 84. The final action treats all
affected entities consistently in how the Part 84 regulations are
applied. The allowance allocation is the division and assignment of a
single, nationwide pool of HFC allowances to entities across the
country according to the uniform, national methodology established in
EPA's regulations, and each entity's allowance allocation is a relative
share of that pool; thus, any additional allowances awarded to one
entity directly affect the allocations to others. The Administrator
finds that this is a matter on which national uniformity is desirable
to take advantage of the D.C. Circuit's administrative law expertise
and facilitate the orderly development of the basic law under the AIM
Act and EPA's implementing regulations. The Administrator also finds
that consolidated review of the action in the D.C. Circuit will avoid
piecemeal litigation in the regional circuits, further judicial
economy, and eliminate the risk of inconsistent results for different
regulated entities. The Administrator also finds that a nationally
consistent approach to the allocation of allowances constitutes the
best use of agency resources. The Administrator is publishing his
finding that the action is based on a determination of nationwide scope
or effect in the Federal Register as part of this notice in addition to
inclusion on the website announcing allocations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ In the report on the 1977 Amendments that revised section
307(b)(1) of the CAA, Congress noted that the Administrator's
determination that the ``nationwide scope or effect'' exception
applies would be appropriate for any action that has a scope or
effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See H.R. Rep. No. 95-294 at
323, 324, reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402-03.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For these reasons, the final action of the Agency allocating
hydrofluorocarbon allowances to entities located throughout the country
is nationally applicable or, alternatively, the Administrator is
exercising the complete discretion afforded to him by the CAA and finds
that the final action is based on a determination of nationwide scope
or effect for purposes of CAA section 307(b)(1) and is hereby
publishing that finding in the Federal Register.
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, petitions for judicial review
of this action must be filed in the United States Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit by December 12, 2022.
Hans Christopher Grundler,
Director, Office of Atmospheric Programs.
[FR Doc. 2022-22059 Filed 10-7-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P